NAIBVolunteer, can you provide any scientific evidence for the existence of distinct and disjunct sub populations in the beluga across the Arctic waters from Greenland up to Okhotsk Sea, Bering Strait, Alaska and back up beyond? Various publications cite 29 sub populations, but how many of those are genetically distinct? Has any research been done to that effect.
BTW: mixing of subspecies - if any - has not just been reserved to beluga whales, it as also been self evident in other cat species. In itself that is not the end. However, I do agree that if evolutionary significant units exists these need to be maintained separately. From what I know about Hudson Bay beluga is that they are heavily loaded with pollutants ....
NOAA regulates belugas accordingly and has determined there are five stocks of beluga whales all in Alaskan waters—the Beaufort Sea, Bristol Bay, Cook Inlet (endangered population which has declined by 80%), eastern Bering Sea, and eastern Chukchi Sea stocks. NOAA has determined that these groups are a distinct population segment.
"Under the Endangered Species Act, a distinct population segment—or DPS—is a vertebrate population or group of populations that is discrete from other populations of the species and significant in relation to the entire species." Glossary: Endangered Species Act
"The population of Sakhalin Bay-Nikolaya Bay-Amur River beluga whales, a stock in the eastern North Pacific off the coast of Russia, is estimated to be around 3,961 whales. In response to a petition, NOAA Fisheries conducted a status review of the stock and designated it as depleted under the MMPA in 2016." Beluga Whale That petition was the botched Georgia Aquarium beluga import permit.